Kayaking on the North Shore

July 10, 2010 by Northshore  
Filed under Arts/Entertainment, Featured, Sports

As the summer wanes and the crowds retreat from our coastline, now is the best time to jump into a kayak for a day to tour the remote inlets and rocky shores from Ipswich to Gloucester.  By Tamsin Venn, photographs by Joel Laino.

In summer months, the waters around Cape Ann can resemble a kicked hornet’s nest, with motorboats zooming about in a frenzy. Come September, the Evinrudes hibernate, and as heat of an Indian summer lingers, the calm waters along the coast can be had all to yourself—the best time to meander in your sea kayak.

If you could plan any sea kayaking trip on the North Shore for a day, the Ipswich-to-Annisquam jaunt couldn’t be a better selection. Start at Pavilion Beach in Ipswich and paddle behind Crane Beach to the quiet waters around Hog Island. Continue out the mouth of the Essex River, follow Wingaersheek Beach to Annisquam Lighthouse, and finish at Lane’s Cove’s breakwater. Tidal estuaries, sand dunes, salt marshes, a 17th-century farm, a lighthouse, and the open ocean await you on this 10-mile journey that follows the shoreline almost entirely. Early morning is the best time to start, before the winds come up; bring a picnic and make a day of it. Later, tuck into one of the local eateries at day’s end to refuel and relax.

Your journey starts in Ipswich at Pavilion Beach, which joins Little Neck to Great Neck. Most kayakers launch at the north end, where there’s plenty of free parking. From the beach, you look over to Sandy Point Reservation, at the southern tip of Plum Island. That stretch of beach is state owned, allowing for kayaks to land. (Plum Island National Wildlife Refuge stretches eight miles north and prohibits landing.) Beyond is Ipswich Bay and the hazy outline of Cape Ann.

After launching, turn right (south) and paddle into the mouth of the Ipswich River. Then bear left toward the marshes into Fox Creek, a tributary of the Ipswich River. You have now entered the territory of mud, grass, and minnows. You are also now behind Castle Hill and The Great House, a large English Stuart-style mansion built by Chicago plumbing magnate Richard Crane in the early 1920s.

Head for the Hay Canal Bridge, which is on the road to Crane Beach. In 1820, a business called the Essex Canal Company built the half-mile canal from Fox Creek to the Castle Neck River to aid in transportation. The idea was to take the logs that came down the Merrimack River from New Hampshire forests to the shipbuilders in Essex. At the time, it was a huge success, but then the railroad arrived, the mud closed in, and it lost its commercial value. Now it’s just a narrow channel through which motorboats and kayaks travel.

After the bridge, paddle another few minutes until you reach the main channel, known as Castle Neck River. Now head for Hog Island, the large drumlin that looms ahead. Keep in mind that Fox Creek dries out at low tide; you must paddle through here three hours on either side of high tide. Once in Castle Neck River, you will be able to find a deep channel even at low tide.

In the late 1990s, Massachusetts Audubon spearheaded a project to protect thousands of acres of marsh behind barrier beaches from Hampton Harbor, NH to Gloucester in what is known as the Great Marsh, the largest span of marsh in New England. The Great Marsh includes this Essex Bay Estuary (as well as the Parker River National Wildlife Refuge, Parker River, and Ipswich River). Officials hope to improve sewage treatment and septic systems, as well as curtail animal waste and fertilizer run-off, making shellfish bed closure a thing of the past. The beautiful marshes you are traveling through make up just one corner of this vast expanse of 25,000 acres.

In early September, you will see wisps of pale sea lavender growing on the marsh and surviving high tides. The rest is a sea of grass. Spartina alterniflora, which the tide covers twice a day, is tough and wide; the coarse Spartina patens grow higher up and only get covered in the flood tides. Harvested in colonial times for salt marsh hay to feed livestock, this plant saved the farmers having to feed the cattle an extra salt ration. Prized by garden clubs, it is an excellent mulch with lots of nutrients minus the seed heads of grass and weeds. The alterniflora was also used for roof thatching; come back in October when the grass turns russet gold and you’ll see why.

In September, bird migration is in full swing. Many shorebirds start migrating south in July, peak in August and September, and go into November. For kayakers, the best time to spot sandpipers scuttling along the mud flats is at mid-to low tide. But you can always see the bigger birds; most notable are the great blue herons, which flock here in numbers before heading south. You will also see white egrets. The smaller ones are the snowy egrets with yellow feet, also known as golden slippers, while the larger great egrets have black feet.

By now you’re ready for a break. Remember, you’re going to take your time doing this trip. Keep Hog Island to your right, and at the Trustees of Reservations dock at the end of Hog Island, pull your boat up onto the beach. The Trustees of Reservations manage about 2,100 acres of beach and marsh, including Crane Beach and Castle Hill and seven islands in the Essex River Estuary and Bay.

Take the 3.5-mile trail from the dock to the top of the island. Hog Island, now known as Choate Island, is a truly magical place. It was the summer home of Masconomet, chief of the Agawam Indian tribe, who liked the high vantage point and the great fishing and clamming in the area. In winter, he and his tribe retreated to the woods in Middleton and Topsfield. In 1638, the Agawams sold the island, which eventually the Choates bought and built a house on in 1725—the prominent dark-brown colonial house, named for United States Senator Rufus Choate.

Choate and Long Island, connected by a causeway, were working farms in the 18th and 19th centuries. You’ll also walk past the 1778 Proctor Barn. Cornelius Crane, son of Richard Crane, and his wife, Mine, are buried at the top of Choate Island, which overlooks Plum Island Sound. Choate Island is open year-round 8am to 4pm, and it’s best to allow a minimum of two hours for a visit here.

After a picnic, paddle over to the back of Crane Beach to what’s known as the inner beach. The water tends to be warmer on this side, and you can land a boat wherever you want. In late summer, the beach is filled with what my British cousin likes to call “gin palaces” or large motorboats, moored three and four abreast, but in September, you’ll have the place to yourself, along with sanderlings, crickets, and a sailboat or two.

Leaving the shores of Crane Beach, you will exit through the mouth of the Essex River. That mouth can be turbulent at times, especially when the wind is going one way and the tide another. Cross over to the Victorian mansions on the other side, round the point, and follow Coffins Beach, around Farm Point, to Wingaersheek Beach.

Right across from the Annisquam Yacht Club (note the sailboats moored and a flag flying), you can land on Wingaersheek Beach for another break. That spot is at the north end of the Annisquam River, which opens into Ipswich Bay. At the other end, it empties into Gloucester Harbor, making Cape Ann an island. That geographic fact is celebrated every July in a challenging 22-mile open ocean race for paddlers around Cape Ann called the Blackburn Challenge, sponsored by the Cape Ann Rowing Club. The club’s original intent was a fun outing with an overnight on Thacher Island off Rockport, but the event has now turned into a three-plus-hour race, attracting some of the world’s best paddlers.

At the mouth of the Annisquam River in 1631, colonists settled in Annisquam Village, a delightful collection of clapboard houses on quiet streets. In those days, Annisquam rivaled Gloucester as a fishing and shipbuilding center, strategically located on the edge of Massachusetts Bay. The river was considered an important harbor of refuge for vessels traveling along the coast. As you paddle up the shore, you pass a series of coves that provided shelter from storms, known well by seafaring vessels. Those now provide the same havens for kayakers.

After the Annisquam Yacht Club, you will pass Annisquam Lighthouse. Government officials built the lighthouse at Wigwam Point, a common meeting ground for local Native Americans, to serve as a marker for the entrance to the Annisquam River in 1801. In 1897, they replaced a second lighthouse with the white brick tower you see now. They added a foghorn in 1931, but soon decided to operate it only from May to October so summer residents could sleep peacefully at night. The Coast Guard completely renovated the lighthouse in 2000, replacing several thousand old bricks, and today it is automated, though a Coast Guard family lives there. On a clear day, when you aren’t concentrating on waves casting spray onto your face, you can see the New Hampshire coastline and Mount Agamenticus in Maine.

Although a sleepy town today, Lanesville was once a great fishing port where you could bring back a boatload of fish from Ipswich Bay. Later, the cove became prosperous for granite quarrying, but when that industry died in the 1930s, it left a quiet village with granite stoops and colorful flowers, completely untouched by national superstores.
Paddle through the breakwater, make a sharp left, and land on the concrete ramp. This will mark the end of your North Shore paddling day. Best of all, you don’t have to travel far to experience all of this; a splendid coastline sits right here in your own back yard.

Major League

May 12, 2010 by Northshore  
Filed under Sports

nsjj10_spinners1The Lowell Spinners hit one out of the park for recession-minded baseball fans. Read more

Len Emmons Returns Hoping for Another Winning Season

September 20, 2009 by Northshore  
Filed under Profile, Sports

Masconomet soccer coach Len Emmons looks past “living legend” status. By Sarah A. Ditkoff. Photograph by Robert Boyd. Read more

A Perfect Match

May 21, 2009 by Northshore  
Filed under Arts/Entertainment, Sports

lobsters_02A new location and a new coach revitalize the Boston Lobsters tennis team.
by Jacqueline Dixon

The Boston Lobsters are at it again this 2009 season, and this year is expected to be as exciting as ever. Last March, the Ferncroft Country Club in Danvers made the North Shore the team’s permanent home. Bahar Uttam, the team’s owner, had high hopes that the move to the Ferncroft would help the team gain popularity—and he sure was right.

Although golf has been the leading sport this side of Massachusetts, the North Shore’s enthusiasm for tennis has been growing rapidly since the Lobster’s move to Danvers. The team’s first season at the Ferncroft brought some much overdue attention to the team, as well as the sport of tennis. And although all went well last season, it still served as a learning curve for the team and all parties involved, and Uttam feels this year is going to be much easier.

“Moving to the Ferncroft was the right thing to do. The North Shore has a huge tennis bed with over 40 different clubs and programs for tennis—everywhere from Woburn to Manchester. Since the move, we’ve seen a bigger attendance and we now have more sponsors. People used to ask me why I was in the seafood business when I mentioned the Boston Lobsters—I don’t get that question anymore,” Uttam said.

But the move to the Ferncroft is old news, as this year all eyes are on the team’s new coach, Bud Shultz. When Uttam purchased the team in 2003, Shultz was the first person he went to for the coaching position. At the time, however, Shultz was dedicating a majority of time to his young children. Now, a few years later, his children are older and Shultz has never been more ready to take on the job.

Having spent the past 30 years in Eastern Massachusetts, Shultz has had the chance to develop lasting friendships and professional acquaintances within the local tennis community. “All you have to do is walk into a tennis club on the North Shore and you’ll see that our sport is alive and thriving. The tennis community is pretty close knit. I’ve met so many great tennis enthusiasts on the North Shore and I think having the Lobsters at the Ferncroft Country Club is a perfect match,” Shultz said.

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A graduate of Bates College, Shultz was a three-time tennis All-American. After only a year of graduate school at Boston University, he started his professional playing career. With a high ranking of 39 in the world, wins over 5 top ten players, he retired in 1989 at the age of 29 to take the position of Director of Tennis and Head Pro at the Longwood Cricket Club in Brookline. But he made sure to continue his association with professional tennis through coaching high ranking players such as Ivan Lendl, Pam Shriver, and Greg Rusedski.

Adding to his list of already qualifying credentials, Shultz received a master’s degree in sports management at UMass Amherst, took another position as the Manager and Head Pro at the Badminton and Tennis Club in Boston, served on the Board of the Boston Tennis Council, and was elected to the New England Tennis Hall of Fame in 2002.

With a very successful draft this past March, the team is heading into the season with confidence, as well as a great mix of old and new talent. Jan-Michael Gambill is back this season with Raquel Kops Jones, along with two new tennis up-and-comers, Stepanie Foretz and James Auckland.

Shultz said, “I know when fans come out to the matches they will be in awe of the level of play and leave thinking what these players can do with a tennis ball is magical.”

However, Shultz’s dedication to the sport does not end on the court. In 1998, he and close tennis buddy Ned Eames, co-founded Tenacity, an after-school program designed to promote health, fitness, academics and of course tennis to inner-city children; the program provides support to over 5,000 children and quickly gained recognition.

lobsters_04“Quite honestly, it’s the most satisfying and rewarding tennis experience I’ve had. The game of tennis has given me so much and I simply feel a responsibility to give back. In a similar way, getting kids to come see the Lobsters will hopefully inspire them in positive ways that will last a lifetime,” Shultz said.

Shultz’s continuous encouragement for community outreach makes him a perfect fit with the Lobsters and the World Team Tennis philosophy of “tennis equality”.

Billie Jean King, retired tennis star and co-founder of the World Team Tennis, firmly believes in equality not only in everyday life, but within the sport of tennis as well. King’s philosophy, “tennis is for everyone,” emerged from her family’s financial hardships as a child, which prevented her from participating in certain programs. Due to these personal experiences, the act of giving back is of utmost importance to King.

“If you have ever seen a World Team Tennis match, you have seen my philosophy on life. It’s men and women competing together on equal terms with equal contributions. This is a great message to share with any community, especially with young people,” King said.

And the league’s philosophy matches up well with their new partnership with the YMCA of the North Shore. The YMCA’s financial assistance program provides programs and services to over 5,500 individuals on the North Shore, but with only two tennis rackets and five tennis balls offering tennis as a program at the Ipswich branch was almost impossible.

Gerry Beauchamp, the Executive Director at the Ipswich YMCA, said, “With about 40,000 members, it is really all about the kids. And we want to introduce tennis to a community that wouldn’t normally be able to experience the sport.”

After Billie Jean King’s donation of tennis equipment last year, the YMCA of the North Shore reached out to the Boston Lobsters in hopes of receiving a similar donation for their lacking tennis program.

Merri-Lynn Lanthrop, the Ipswich YMCA’s Aquatics Director, said, “The World Team Tennis offers a fresh new look for tennis with a fun and unique format. The crowd can cheer or boo, which isn’t typical tennis. And it is truly family-oriented. So, the partnership is a great match between the YMCA philosophy of including “all” and the relatively new World Team Tennis league’s desire to make tennis accessible to everyone regardless of income, race or demographic.”

As an exciting affirmation of this partnership, the organizations are set to co-host “Kids to Camp Connection,” a private event with Billie Jean King on July 12 at the Sheraton Ferncroft Hotel in Danvers. There will be an exclusive reception with Billie Jean King, entertainment by Ayla Brown of American Idol, box seat tickets to the Boston Lobsters tennis match alongside King, and best of all, all proceeds from ticket sales will help send a child to camp in 2009.

An even more enticing aspect to the Boston Lobsters is its aim to make their events as affordable as possible. For example, a family of 4 can attend a match for under $100, which is much less than a professional baseball game. This season the Boston Lobsters are hosting a bundle of events to help families enjoy a day out without emptying their pockets. Very aware that times are tough, the Boston Lobsters are proving they can put on a sporting event worth that extra buck.

lobsters_01Along with the much anticipated marquee visit from Washington Kastles’ Serena Williams on July 9, Massachusetts children ages 13-18 will have the opportunity to write an essay focused on how Williams inspires them on and off the court. The lucky winner will receive 2 tickets to the match, meet Williams, as well as grab a picture with her. The deadline for the submission is June 1 and can be emailed to Debbie@bostonlobsters.net.

The home opener is set for Monday, July 6 vs. the Kansas City Explorers, presented by Beverly Hospital. Other events include: Ladies Night and Business Networking on July 7 and Family Day on July 18, sponsored by Polar Beverages.

Tickets can be bought online and cost $15-$30 (depending on the marquee) and $60 for box seats. Tickets for kids under 12 are$15. Season passes are also available for $125-$300. Tickets can be purchased by calling 877-617-5627 (LOBS) or visiting the team website at bostonlobsters.net.

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Hunger Strikers Run Boston Marathon for Lazarus House

March 11, 2009 by Northshore  
Filed under Sports

Not all of us can, or even want to run 26.2 miles from Hopkinton to Boston. As many Boston Marathon runners will contest, hitting and surpassing that 20-mile mark can be a real doozy. For those runners involved with any of the 24 official charities, however, finishing isn’t just a goal, it’s a necessity. Read more

Kayaking

September 27, 2008 by Northshore  
Filed under Arts/Entertainment, Sports

White-knuckle maneuvering or peaceful paddle, kayaking offers an opportunity to explore the North Shore in an intimate way no other craft can give. Read more

18 For Life

September 20, 2008 by Northshore  
Filed under Sports

The North Shore is a real swinging community. No wonder, then, that we have some of the best and most beautiful golf courses in the world. Read more

Back on Track

September 20, 2008 by Northshore  
Filed under Sports

Joe DeMarco takes it to the top…again. Read more

Champing at the Bit

July 20, 2008 by Northshore  
Filed under Sports

The North Shore looks forward to 2006 Fidelity Jumper Classic Read more

Ferncroft Serves Up

June 20, 2008 by Northshore  
Filed under Sports

North Shore tennis buffs are getting ready to don their sun visors and favorite spectator outfits in anticipation of a very special July. Read more